A member of the
Southern Conference, ETSU sponsors teams in eight men's and nine women's NCAA-sanctioned sports: The most recent change to ETSU's sports sponsorship was the dropping of men's indoor track & field after the 2022–23 season.
Baseball Casey Mae Riley serves as the Director of Player Operations. ETSU's baseball team won the
2013 Atlantic Sun Tournament with a 7–2 win over Kennesaw State May 26, 2013. The first-ever A-Sun championship for ETSU win earned the Bucs their first NCAA tournament appearance in 32 years.
Basketball ETSU has a long history in men's basketball with an all-time record of 1,252–1,005 and 10 overall appearances in the
NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship, with their last appearance occurring in 2017. They appeared in the Sweet Sixteen in the
1968 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, and have an overall tournament record of 2–10. The men's head coach is currently Desmond Oliver. He became the 18th head coach in ETSU's 100+ year history. After Steve Forbes left to become head coach of Wake Forest in 2020, assistant Jason Shay became the men's head basketball coach for one season. ETSU has also had success with their women's basketball program going to the
NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championships in 2008, 2009, and 2010. Besides appearing in the
NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championship three times, they have also appeared
Women's National Invitation Tournament three times with their most recent appearance coming in 2015. Overall the women's program has 543–597 record. The women's head coach is currently
Brittney Ezell. She became the eighth head coach in the 46-year history of East Tennessee State University women's basketball on May 8, 2013. The 2013–14 campaign—in which the team went 9–21 overall—was Ezell's first leading the Bucs after spending three seasons as the head coach at Belmont University in Nashville. In 2014–15, ETSU experienced an unbelievable turnaround under Ezell with a 16-game win progression from 2013 to 2014 where the Bucs went 9–21. The total win improvement was the second best in the country. The 2014–15 win total of 21 marked the first time since the 2009–10 season that ETSU reached 20 wins. Led by Ezell, the Bucs made it to the Southern Conference Tournament Championship game falling to No.1 seed Chattanooga in overtime, 61–56. ETSU appeared in the Women's National Invitational Tournament (WNIT) for the third time in school history falling short to NC State, 73–59.
Football East Tennessee State established its first football team in 1920 when the university was still called East Tennessee State Normal School. ETSU fielded a team every year until the 2004 season when the decision was made to disband the program based on the recommendations of a 1999 Athletic Task Force and then university president Paul Stanton. In January 2013, the Student Government Association approved a student fee increase that would help fund and resurrect the program. Former
University of Tennessee head coach
Phillip Fulmer was given the task of helping guide the direction of the new program. On the recommendation of Coach Fulmer, ETSU hired former
University of North Carolina head coach
Carl Torbush as the team's new head coach. In the Fall of 2017, the Buccaneers will begin playing on their newly erected football stadium. Notable football alumni include
Donnie Abraham,
Earl Ferrell,
Thane Gash,
Gerald Sensabaugh and
Mike Smith. A couple of the more memorable highlights of ETSU football history include the 1969 team that went undefeated and beat Louisiana Tech, led by
Terry Bradshaw, in the
Grantland Rice Bowl in Baton Rouge, LA and the 1996 team that went 10-3 and advanced to the Division I-AA quarterfinals after defeating
Villanova, 35–29, in a first-round playoff game in
Memorial Center. •
Ohio Valley Conference (3): 1970, 1972, 1976 •
Southern Conference (19): 1979–83, 1989–92, 1994–96, 1998–2001, 2005, 2015–17 •
Atlantic Sun Conference (2): 2007, 2010 Their best finish in the
NCAA Division I Championship was 3rd place in 1996. Notable ETSU golfers include
Eric Axley,
Rhys Davies,
David Eger,
Larry Hinson,
Mike Hulbert,
Keith Nolan,
J. C. Snead,
Bobby Wadkins,
Garrett Willis and
Adrian Meronk. ==Southern Conference==